Showing posts with label UK-Scotland-Aberdeenshire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UK-Scotland-Aberdeenshire. Show all posts

Sunday 16 July 2023

Banff and Macduff, Scotland '23 Part 2

Two Small Towns Facing Each Other Across the River Deveron

A Brief Introduction


Scotland
Aberdeenshire
After driving north from Falkirk, we spent a week, as we did last year, in a borrowed cottage (thank you Jenny and Bob) in the delightful fishing village of Findochty, beside the Moray Firth. For no obvious reason Findochty is pronounced ‘Finechty.’ Our ‘outings,’ to Banff & Macduff, Pitmedden & Haddo House and Lossiemiouth & Elgin will be described in this and the two following posts. The rest of the time we pottered happily about Findochty and Buckie. Some of that pottering fed into improvements (and one enlargement) of last year's Findochty, Portknockie and Cullen post.

Findochty is a fishing village 2¾ miles from the tiny metropolis of Buckie and 120 miles north of Edinburgh

Whatever Happened to Banffshire?

We set off from Findochty, driving 30 minutes along the coast via Cullen and Portsoy (see map below) to Banff. Findochty is in Moray, but once beyond Cullen we were in Aberdeenshire.

Moray and Aberdeen
Findochty is not marked but is between Buckie and Cullen

When I was a lad, there were 33 counties in Scotland, 40 in England and 12 in Wales. A major overhaul in 1974 resulted in wholesale mergers in both Wales and Scotland. Scotland’s 33 counties became 10 districts with Fife the only remained traditional county name. The old system had too many small counties with small populations, but the re-arrangement made local government too remote.

Devolution gave Wales and Scotland control of their own local organisation and both had another go. In 1996 Scotland divided itself into 38 ‘Council Districts,’ a similar number to the old counties, but with districts better reflecting the population distribution.

Along the Moray coast pre-1974 there were Nairn, Moray, Banffshire and Aberdeenshire. Nairn was swallowed up by the Highland District and Banffshire, which sprawled along the coast from Spey Bay to Crovie was split between Moray and Aberdeenshire.

Banff

The first castle at Banff was built to deter Viking raiders, but by 1163 it was more developed and Malcolm IV was residing there. A town grew round the castle and prospered by trading with the other Northern Scottish burghs. By 1264 Banff had a sheriff and in 1372 Robert II conferred Royal Burgh status.

For a former Royal Burgh and County Town, modern Banff, tucked into the north-west corner of Banff Bay, is a modest little town with a population of some 4,000.

The Harbour

Arriving from the west it was convenient to start with the surprisingly small harbour.

Banff Harbour

Banff has no natural harbour, but a sheltered anchorage was enough in the early days. The first small constructed harbour in 1471, was enough for Banff, along with Montrose and Aberdeen, to dominate salmon exports to continental Europe. 18th and 19th century enlargements allowed the town to play a major part in the new and lucrative herring trade. The trade peaked in 1845 before dwindling away in the early 20th century. Today the sight of a working boat in the small harbour is vanishingly rare.

Low Street

With a little searching we found what looked like the town centre. Low Street has, perversely, most of the characteristics of a High Street, and briefly swells into not-quite-a-town-square. There is also a High Street which runs parallel (and a little higher up the hill) and also has shops.

Banff Townhouse

As we discovered in Edinburgh two years ago, to be a Burgh (or Royal Burgh) a town needed a Kirk, a Tolbooth and a Mercat (Market) Cross. The Parish Church is in High Street, but the Tolbooth – a combined council meeting room, courthouse and lock-up was built in Old Street in the early 15th century. 250 years later it was in poor condition and in 1757 it was replaced by a steeple. Outside Scotland, only churches have steeples, but we encountered three secular steeples (this, Falkirk and Dumfries) on this year’s Scottish travels. It was too small to fulfil the tolbooth role, so the adjacent town house was added in 1797. After being a museum and then police headquarters in the 19th century, it is now the local office of Aberdeenshire district council.

Banff Townhouse and Spire

The Mercat Cross

The original cross with a Crucifixion on one side and a Virgin and Child on the other, was lucky to survive the iconoclasm of the Scottish Reformation. It once stood outside the tolbooth but was removed in 1767 and then spent 130 years topping the Earl of Fife’s dovecote.

Mercat Cross, Banff

It was returned to the town in 1900 and since 1994 has found sanctuary in the Banff Museum. A replica mounted on a 17th century shaft sits near its original position.

The Biggar Fountain

That original position has been occupied since 1878 by an ornate Victorian Gothic drinking fountain. It commemorates Walter Biggar, one of the founders of the Baltic herring trade which brought prosperity to Banff in the 19th century. It also commemorates his wife, Mrs Anne Duff, which takes us on to the next section.

Biggar Fountain, Banff

But before we go, the most remarkable feature of central Banff is not the small cluster of monuments, but the people, or rather lack of them. Apart from one man photographed walking behind the fountain, and another who sat on the steps outside the Townhouse until a bus took him away, there was nobody there! On a warm, sunny, summer Sunday morning, all 4,000 inhabitants were apparently in church, in bed or in hiding.

Duff House

Duff House is a Georgian mansion on the southern edge of Banff. Built between 1735 and 1740 for William Duff, it was designed by William Adam. William Adam may have been outshone by his sons, John, Robert and James, but he had a busy practice building large houses for the Scottish aristocracy.

Duff House is well signed, but strangely difficult to find. Turning off the main road by the Duff House Royal Golf Club the road passes a car park beside a rugby pitch. Having no better idea, we parked there and followed a footpath around the woods. After 100m we rounded a slight bend and Duff House suddenly appeared right in front of us. How it had remained hidden is a mystery, but having found it, we joined the guided tour.

Duff House, Banff

William Duff’s father made his pile as a merchant and William inherited in 1722 aged 25. He became Member of Parliament for Banffshire after standing unopposed in the 1727 general election. George I rarely attended cabinet meetings after 1717 and Robert Walpole became the de facto prime minister in 1721. Political parties were yet to form and the franchise was limited to ‘property owning men.’

Duff opposed the government on several occasions and was persuaded to step down in 1734 in favour of his more biddable brother-in-law. As a reward he was created Lord Braco of Kilbryde and was able to start building his big house. The principals of British politics have changed little in 300 years.

Entrance Hall, Duff House

Duff dominated the political scene in Banffshire (not a huge fish, but a small pond), and had joined the aristocracy but with not quite the title he craved.

Minerva and her right hand man guarding the ceramics, Duff House

In Shakespeare’s ‘Macbeth,’ Macduff is the loyal and noble counterpoint to the treacherous title character. How grand, William Duff thought, to be a descendant of Macduff.

This stuff might be important in the History of Furniture, but I have rather forgotten what it is, Duff House

The accepted (if partly mythological) list of Scottish Kings includes a King Duff who ruled Alba – the chunk of Scotland between the Moray Firth and the Firth of Forth - from 962 until 967. The system of succession then used in Scotland meant sons did not automatically succeed fathers. Duff’s son became not king but Mormaer (or Thane or Earl) of Fife, the rank of Shakespeare’s Macduff. The Clan MacDuff was the most important family in Fife for several centuries.

Weapons and a chandelier, Duff House

Sorting fact from legend in the early MacDuff story is impossible, but William Duff found records of a David Duff in Aberdeenshire who received a charter from Robert III in 1404. William then proved to his own satisfaction that he was descended from David Duff, who was obviously related the Fife MacDuffs, hence he, William. was related to Shakespeare’s great, if largely fictional, Macduff.

Dining at Duff House

As he was rich and influential everybody acknowledged, at least in public, that William Duff was the real deal. The way was almost clear for him to have his heart’s desire.

Menu for Wednesday 14-Nov-1873

Unfortunately, in 1745 Charles Edward Stuart, Bonnie Prince Charlie, made the last desperate attempt to restore the Stuarts to the thrones of Scotland and England. Most of the Scots who stood with Bonnie Prince Charlie at his last stand at Culloden (See Culloden and Cawdor for details) were recruited in and around Aberdeenshire, and that put a question mark against William Duff’s loyalty to the government.

The stairs, Duff House

That question mark was not fully erased until 1759 when his wish came true and he was created Earl Fife and Viscount MacDuff. With nothing more to prove, he died in 1763.

Duff House after William Duff

Six Earls Fife lived in Duff House, the last donating it to the Burgh of Banff in 1903. Used as a hotel and sanatorium until 1928, the house lay empty until the second world war, when it became an internment camp and then housed prisoners of war.

In the mid-19th century David Bryce had been commissioned to build a three-story pavilion and corridor block. It is unclear why a German bomber was flying along the Moray coast on the morning of the 22nd of July 1940. Maybe it was lost, but it dumped four bombs, effectively destroying Bryce’s extension.

The site and remains of the Bryce extension

Worse, eight people were killed, six German prisoners of war and two of their guards. In 2019 a memorial was erected bearing their names.

Memorial to those who died in the Duff House air raid

In 1956 the house was passed to what would become ‘Historic Environment for Scotland’ and in 1995 also became part of the National Galleries of Scotland. Pictures on display include paintings by Henry Raeburn, Joshua Reynolds…

Lady Dorothea Sinclair, wife of the 2nd Earl, by Sir Joshua Reynolds

...and El Greco/

Saint Jerome in Penitence by El Greco

There is an almost identical, though slightly smaller painting called St Jerome as a Penitent, also painted by El Greco around 1600. It is in the collection of The Hispanic Society of America.

Developing Macduff

The other Earl Fife who made a major local contribution was the 2nd Earl, William’s son James. The problem with Banff is that even after the 18th century improvements, the harbour remained inadequate. Noticing there was more scope for development on the other side of Deveron Bay, James Duff developed the small settlement of Doune, built a harbour and in 1783, changed its name to Macduff.

While the harbour at Banff is used by pleasure boats, Macduff still has an important working harbour

To Macduff

We left Duff House around lunchtime, a tine for a sandwich and a cup of tea. According to the internet several establishments in Banff would normally cater for our needs, but this was Sunday so Banff, as we had already observed, was closed.

Macduff, with a similar population, was little better, but one café proudly claimed to be open, even on the Sabbath. To get there we had to cross the River Deveron.

The river flows 60 miles (97km) from the Ladder Hills in the Cairngorms before squeezing between Banff and the Hill of Doune and thence to the sea. On a fine summer’s day, it looks a pleasant stream, and if you cannot actually see the Atlantic salmon and brown trout, you can be sure they are there. But the river has other moods. Crossings were by what has been described as ‘an uncertain ferry,’ until a bridge was built in 1765. Unfortunately, it was swept away three years later. The ferry resumed, but sank in 1773. A sturdier bridge was completed in 1799.

Macduff and The Sea World Centre

Crossing the bridge without incident, we drove round the hill and found ourselves in the town, which seemed as animated as Banff. Being very much a working port, it looked more industrial, but on Sunday no one was being industrious.

We parked at the Sea World Centre aquarium and walked the 50m or so to the allegedly open café. It did not look promising as we approached and was indeed closed. A handwritten sign on the door apologised, explaining that they had a case of covid in the family and thought it responsible to close for a day or two. They were probably right, though it meant we had no lunch.

There was nothing for it, but to return to the aquarium, buy our tickets and watch some fish,

Fish at Macduff Sea World Centre

The aquarium is a circular building with a circular tank to circumambulate and several smaller tanks on the outside of the circus.

It is not large but it has an interesting variety of sea fish. They could have made identification easier, but I know the fish below with its somewhat startled look, is Cyclopterus lumpus, the lumpsucker or lumpfish (or sometimes Seahen.)

Cyclopterus Iumpus

I read that despite being a fish, it does not swim well (a piscine prerequisite, I had always thought) but bobs around at the bottom o the beautiful briny sea, or at least the continental shelf. Its redeeming virtue is its roe which is sometime sold as ‘lumpfish caviar’ - though it is not in the same class as real caviar (smaller, grainier, less flavourful).

The one in my cupboard calls itself  'Lumpfish Caviar'

Nevertheless, a handful of Ritz crackers, each liberally smeared with lumpfish roe and topped with half a boiled quail’s egg, make a excellent starter for 2 or 4 (depending on the size of your hand.)

The afternoon’s main excitement is the diver who enters the main tank to feed whatever turns up to be fed, manly cod (light grey, cedilla under chin) and coley (darker grey, no cedilla).

Diver feeds fish, Sea World Centre, Macduff

That just about exhausted the delights of Macduff and Banff, so we drove back ‘home’ in Findochty.

Scotland 2023 (so far)

Part 1 Falkirk
Part 2 Banff and Macduff
Part 5 A Rainy Day in Dumfries (1) Robert Burns

Friday 22 July 2022

Stirling: Scotland '22 Part 7

The Brooch that Clasps the Highlands and Lowlands Together

21-July-2022

Findochty to Stirling

Scotland
Moray
There was no rush in the morning, so when we were good and ready, we left Findochty and set out on our 170 mile journey south to Stirling. A cross-country trip would take us to the A9, not the fastest of trunk roads, and some 3½ hours later, according to Google would deliver us to our destination. But we have been up and down the A9 several times, so instead of tapping ‘recommended route,' I tapped ‘alternative route.’

We travelled from Findochty on the Moray Coast to Stirling
The Cairngorms is the large green splodge lying right in the way

The alternative route via Braemar is 16 miles shorter, but goes straight(ish) through the Cairngorms National Park, not round it like the A9. Google thinks it takes half an hour longer – rather over-estimating the speed a sane person drives on twisting, narrow (sometimes ‘single-track,’) roads.

The Cairngorms contain all the highest mountains of the British Isles, except Ben Nevis, at 1,345m (4,413ft), the highest of them all, which is something of an outlier. Perhaps oddly there was little mountainous to see from the road.

Into the Cairngorms

All the land north and west of the Great Glen, the geological fault running NE across Scotland from Fort William to Inverness, is in the Highland Council District. This is neat, tidy and has a natural boundary, but the Highland District bulges across the Great Glen to include part of the Cairngorms National Park, largely the part with the mountains. I suppose it would be odd if most of Scotland’s highest peaks were not in the Highlands, but to my tidy little mathematical mind, it feels unsatisfactory.

Perhaps that's a mountain down there.
Not all the roads in the Cairngorms are twisty

Braemar


Aberdeenshire
There was no sign suggesting our route ever entered the Highlands, and when we descended south of the main massif into Braemar, we were definitely in Aberdeenshire.

Braemar, nestled in the hills beside the River Dee, is a remarkably pretty village, in the way most Scottish villages aren’t. Obviously affluent, and with the buildings and streets cheerfully bedecked with flowers, Braemar is 10 miles from Balmoral Castle, the summer home of the queen.

Lunchtime had arrived, so we stopped for a cup of tea and a sandwich at the café in the rather splendid Duke of Rothesay Pavilion in the Highland Games Centre. Then we went to look at the stadium.

Braemar Highland Games Centre. If I had told them I was coming, there might have been a crowd

Highland Gatherings (or Games) claim to be descended from events held in the reign of Malcolm Canmore (r1058-93) but are largely a 19th century invention and the wearing of kilts and tartans a reaction to their being banned a couple of centuries previously after the Jacobite Rebellion (1745).

Wikipedia gives the impression that Highland Gatherings were now largely an American occupation. Not so, there are 24 major games held in Scotland every year during spring and summer. There are competitions in running, ‘heavy events’ like throwing weights for distance or height and tossing the caber, as well as cultural events like Highland Dancing and playing the bagpipes (is that really cultural?).

Braemar is not the biggest event, but it is the one attended every year by the Queen. [Update: though sadly not in 2022. The Queen was unwell and died, aged 96, some five days after the games were held.] I am not a natural royalist, but it is hard not to admire someone who took an oath to do something in 1952, and kept on doing it – and rarely putting a foot wrong – until 2022.

We thought we had left the Cairngorms, but discovered they continue some way further south of Braemar…

More of the Cairngorms

…after which the sat nav sent us through a labyrinth of minor roads, before eventually decanting us onto the A9 near Perth and thence to Stirling.

Stirling

Stirling C A

Stirling Council Area, one of Scotland’s 32 administrative districts, is a rough rectangle bounded by the Firth of Forth and Loch Lomond. The north and west is sparsely populated highland, the south and east is flat agricultural land – the flood plain of the River Forth. The 93,000 inhabitants mostly live in and around the city of Stirling in the south east corner.

Stirling Council Area

Crossing the plain towards Stirling, the rocky outcrop, topped by the castle, becomes increasingly prominent. Leaving the motorway, the signed route into the city centre surprisingly climbs the back of the outcrop, passes the castle and then funnels new arrivals down St John Street. Like most Scottish towns and cities, Stirling, is built of dour, dark grey stone. Without the hanging baskets of Braemar, or the least hint of sunshine, it is not a welcoming sight.

Stirling

Conveniently, we passed The Golden Lion, our base for the next two nights – at least it would have been convenient had we not missed it on the first pass.

The Golden Lion, Stirling

Inside, the hotel’s décor and furnishings (not really my subjects) seemed stuck in the 1980s, but the staff were pleasant and efficient. The bar staff provided me with what I needed after a long drive,...

The Golden Lion, Stirling

... the restaurant staff were cheerful and efficient and later, when we had a small plumbing problem, the receptionists, listened, smilingly promised to get it fixed, and did so. The restaurant menu also had a 1980s vibe, though somebody was tuned into the zeitgeist, the lump of haggis accompanying my chicken breast was described as a ‘bonbon’.

22-July-2022

We arranged our Stirling visits for geographical convenience, for blogging I have rearranged them in a more historical and narrative-friendly order.

A castle has stood on Stirling’s rocky crop possibly since Roman times, certainly from before 1110. It encompasses so much of Stirling’s history that I will come to it at the end.

Stirling Old Bridge

Stirling’s importance does not just come from a rocky outcrop, for centuries it was the lowest crossing point on the River Forth. (For lower modern crossings see Edinburgh (2) ).

Stirling Old Bridge

Stirling Old Bridge is a 4-arch stone bridge on a foundation of rubble sitting on a meander north of the old town. It is 82m long and was built around 1500. A new road bridge was built nearby in 1833 and the Old Bridge was closed to wheeled vehicles – there is now an exemption for bicycles which did not exist in 1833.

The Battle of Stirling Bridge

A Little History


Alexander III, St Giles, Edinburgh
photo: Kim Traynor
When King Alexander III died in 1286 his heir was his granddaughter, Margaret, Maid of Norway (Alexander had married his daughter to King Eric III of Norway). Margaret was 3 years old and the ‘Guardians of Scotland,’ a group of senior nobles and churchmen was set up to manage the situation. Margaret set off for her new kingdom in 1290, but died en route.

The several claimants to the throne brought Scotland to the brink of civil war, so the Guardians invited Edward I of England to adjudicate. Edward was already involved, his late sister had been Alexander III’s wife and his son, the future Edward II had been betrothed to young Margaret. He was also a top-grade medieval war lord, and so took the opportunity to increase his personal fiefdom. In 1290, after inserting his own men into positions of power as a condition for making the decision, he selected John Balliol, judging him the most easily controllable.

John Balliol
Forman Armorial, 1562
In the 1980s, comedian Ben Elton referred to one of Margaret Thatcher’s less stellar cabinet appointments as a ‘suit full of bugger-all.’ The Scots had the same idea 700 years earlier, calling King John ‘Toom Tabard’ (empty coat).

Edward tired of his incompetence and deposed him in 1296. A rebellion against Edward I’s appointees followed and William Wallace, previously an obscure minor noble from Strathclyde and Andrew Moray became the leaders. Edward I was busy in France so he sent the Earl of Surrey, and Hugh de Cressingham to sort it out. Their army met that of Wallace and Moray at Stirling Bridge



The Battle

Wallace’s 6,000 men occupied the flat, soft ground north of the river with Surrey’s 9,000 on the south. Sir Richard Lundie, one of the Scots fighting for Surrey (few of these battles were as simply Scots v English as some like to think) offered to lead 60 knights to a crossing place and outflank Wallace. Surrey declined and opted for frontal assault and sent his cavalry across the bridge onto the soft ground. Maybe they charged, but wooden bridge was narrow and the ground boggy.

A cavalry charge across here looks a bad idea, and the 'old  Old Bridge' was 200 years earlier

Wallace watched the cavalry flounder, then watched the infantry follow and at the right moment closed the circle about them and started hewing them down. Reinforcements could not get through and Surry’s men still south of the bridge watched helplessly. They were not trained professional soldiers, there were none in those days, they were just peasants following their lord into battle; they would do some killing and pick up some booty, but they had no intention of hanging around waiting to die, so they left. Battle over.

This was not a battle near a bridge, the bridge was essential to the battle. 'Braveheart', a film I shall mention again later, managed to film their Battle of Stirling Bridge without a bridge - and that was not the worst error.

The Wallace Memorial

The Wallace Monument

The Wallace Monument is an ugly 67m tower on Abbey Craig overlooking the battlefield. It was built by public subscription, fundraising began in 1851 and the foundation stone was laid by the Duke of Atholl in 1861. It was completed in 1869.

The Wallace Memorial on Abbey Craig

Inside there are three exhibition rooms and 265 steps to the viewpoint.  We had a light lunch in the café in the woods below, but did not bother to go in.

Although Wallace was a member of the minor nobility nothing is known of his youth - even his father’s name is disputed.

William Wallace, Edinburgh
Photo Kim Traynor
In July 1297 he was involved in the killing of William Heselrig, probably part of a co-ordinated uprising against Edward I’s appointees. Wallace emerged as one of the leaders of this uprising, and won the easy victory at Stirling Bridge in November 1297 as described above. He then had some knightly fun raiding across Northumberland and Cumbria – though the villagers whose dwellings were burnt may have seem it a differently.

The next summer Edward I came north himself and defeated Wallace at Falkirk in July. Wallace left for the continent but made the mistake of returning a few years later. He was hunted down and executed in 1305.

Wallace achieved far more in legend than in real life. The sources for the legend are a poem called The Wallace by ‘Blind Harry’ written about 1477 and the anachronistic ramblings of Mel Gibson’s Braveheart.

The Battle of Bannockburn

On this trip we have visited arguably the two most important battlefields in Scotland, Culloden (1745) a week ago and today Bannockburn (1314), just south of Stirling.

A Little More History

After seeing off Wallace, Edward I went away to deal with more important matters. He returned and campaigned in 1304, leaving convinced he had added Scotland to a portfolio that already included Gascony (among other parts of France), England, Ireland and Wales.

However, two claimants to the Scottish throne still survived, John Comyn, Lord of Badenoch, and Robert the Bruce, Lord of Annandale. In 1306 they met to discuss their differences in the chapel of Greyfriars in Dumfries (we visited 2023). Robert the Bruce won the argument by stabbing Comyn to death, thus becoming King Robert I of Scotland. He then captured a few castles.

Robert the Bruce as he may have looked at Bannockburn
Pilkington Jackson, 1964

Edward was now over 60, an old man for the time, so he stayed home and sent an army to sort out the problem. Bruce was defeated at the Battle of Methven and went into hiding. Edward’s army recaptured some castles and came home.

Bruce renewed his activities in 1307, so Edward decided to deal with him himself. He marched north, but developed dysentery and died in Burgh by Sands just south of the Scottish border.

He was succeeded by his son, Edward II. Unlike his father Edward II was a reluctant warrior and only felt the need to act in 1314 when Bruce besieged Stirling Castle.

The Battle

Edward rushed towards Stirling arriving on the 23rd of June 1314, with a large army (20-25,000) of tired men. How anybody arrived anywhere with the maps available at the time is a mystery to me.

A contemporary map of Great Britain, Bannockburn visitor centre

Bruce, with only 5-8,000 men, was headquartered where the Memorial now stands.

The Bannockburn Memorial

Edward's men were across the battlefield to the south.

The Bannockburn Battlefield - not a very interesting picture!

On the 23rd an English flanking manoeuvre with 300 men resulted in a skirmish where an undisciplined and over-confident charge preceded a rout.

Edward’s tired and now dispirited men spent an uncomfortable night in a boggy field beside the Bannockburn.

The next morning Edward brought his men across the burn, but they were still on boggy land. A deserter had informed Robert that English morale was low and advised him to attack. He marched his men forward.

The sudden arrival of well drilled schiltrons of pikemen further unnerved Edaward’s army. With their knights pinned in boggy ground between the schiltrons and the burn, and the support of their archers doing more damaged to their own men than the enemy, the battle was soon over. Edward II scuttled south leaving Robert I unchallenged King of Scotland.

Edward II was neither a warrior nor a leader of men. In 1327 he was deposed by his own mother and her lover Roger Mortimer and murdered shortly afterwards. His son, Edward III turned out to be better suited to the job.

Stirling Castle

No one knows who first claimed the rocky outcrop now surmounted by Stirling Castle, but it is such an obvious defensive point it must have attracted peoples now long-forgotten whose names were never written down.

From the plain the current buildings still look forbidding - Stirling Castle represented Colditz Castle in the opening shots of the 1970s TV series – but the outcrop is of the ‘crag and tail’ variety. The older parts of the city spread down the tail and as we walked up the main street the city would have merged into the castle were there not a gate and a young woman checking tickets.

Most surviving structures are from the 15th and 16th centuries. Some are a little older, others younger and the ‘outer defences’ beyond the town gate, are 18th century and now enclose a garden showing how the castle eventually morphed into a palace.

Inside the Outer Defences, Stirling Castle

To the southwest is the Kings Knot, a 12th century park once used for jousting, hawking and hunting. In the 1490s, James IV planted fruit trees, flowers and ornamental hedges, and the earthwork was constructed for the Scottish coronation of Charles I’s in 1633. Stirling Heritage Trust say the most impressive view of the castle is from this earthwork.

The King's Knott by Stirling Castle

The castle’s first appearance in written record was surprisingly late when King Alexander I dedicated a chapel here in 1110. Stirling became a Royal Burgh and an administrative centre in the reign of Alexander’s successor (and brother) David I (r1124-53).

Being situated at almost the narrowest part of Scotland with the Highlands to the north and the Lowlands to the south, Stirling’s strategic importance led to the saying, ‘he who holds Stirling holds Scotland.’ The Castle has thus been besieged seven times, most frequently during the wars with Edward I of England, and most recently by Charle Edward Stuart in 1745 during his abortive attempt to regain the crown for the Stuarts.

Through a gate…

Into the Inner Ward, Stirling Castle

…we entered an older section of the castle, though more Stuart than medieval.

In the inner ward, Stirling Castle

Inside there was a minstrel to pluck a tune on his lute to accompany our visit.

Minstrel, Stirling Castle

We admired the tapestries…

Tapestries, Stirling Castle

…. and the queen’s bedchamber. She did not sleep here, she had a smaller, more personal room behind, this one was just for show.

Queens Bedchamber, Stirling Castle

The Stirling Heads – 16th century medallions, a metre in diameter, with carvings of kings, queens, nobles, Roman emperors, biblical figures and characters from classical mythology - decorated the palace ceilings until a collapse in 1777.

One of the Stirling Heads

Back outside we approached the North Gate, in part dating from the 1380s making it the oldest structure in the castle.

The North Gate, Stirling Castle

And so our castle visit came to an end.

The Maharajah

Like many Scottish towns Stirling has many restaurants opening 10.00 to 5.00 pm for coffee, lunch and tea, but surprisingly few offer dinner. Eating out on a Friday night requires booking, and doing so earlier than we did.

However, we had exhausted the delights of the hotel menu, and The Maharajah may have maintained a low profile on the internet and local guides, but it was just across the road. Small Indian restaurants are very variable and we had no local knowledge, but we decided to chance our luck. And lucky we were, The Maharajah fed us well, so now we have local knowledge I can advise travellers searching for an evening meal in Stirling to visit the Maharajah.

The Maharajah, Stirling

I was not surprised by the number of cyclists coming in carrying the distinctive boxes of Deliveroo and its competitors, they soon loaded up and peddled off, but what surprised me was that most were not youngsters but men in their 50s or 60s’

The End

So our 2022 Scottish sojourn ended with our best meal out since our first night in Glasgow. The next day we made the long drive home.